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POPULAR KNEE SURGERY FOUND INEFFECTIVE


9 Nov 2005

 

            Results of a recent study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that arthroscopy is not an effective procedure to relieve arthritis pain.

            Arthroscopic surgery is performed on at least 225,000 middle-aged Americans each year.  The procedure requires three small incisions to be made in the knee, through which an arthroscope is inserted to give the surgeon a view of the joint.  Debris is flushed from the knee or rough areas of cartilage are shaved off the joint.

            180 patients participated in the Baylor College os Medecine study.  Each patient was randomly assigned to have the arthroscopy surgery or a placebo surgery, where the surgeons would make incisions in their knees to simulate an operation.

            160 patients, who completed the trial, were assessed two years after the study from self-reported scores to measure pain and function and an objective test consisting of walking and stair climbing.

            None of the patients who had the surgery reported less pain or better function than the placebo group, at any point of the study.

 

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